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Old 10-28-2018, 10:54 AM
HARDCORE HARDCORE is offline
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Question Equal Justice

10-28-2018

(More personal opinions)

“A person can talk until they are blue in the face, but unless someone in power is listening, it is all nothing more than hot air or an exercise in wishful futility” – and that is the absolute truth!

Now I don’t care who they are, or even what they claim to represent, unless a politician (any politician) honors their elected mandate, along with their sacred word or honor, they (regardless of their party affiliations) are not worth spit! And as such, they should (and they must), be immediately replaced by genuine patriots and men and women of truth and honor! “To do otherwise after all, is a vicious attack against everything that we are, or that we could ever hope to be, as a nation of freedom and liberty loving descendants of “Our Illustrious Founders!”

But worst of all however, we all hear a great deal about “Equal Justice” these days! But equality can not possibly exist until (and unless) it becomes far more than just a splendid sounding ideal that everyone talks about, but no one has the slightest intention of honoring?

“For where there is no truth, there can never be any honor - and where no honor resides, neither can there be much hope for the everlasting future for our entire race!”
(by - H. R. Tavares – 10/28/2018)

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Old 10-28-2018, 12:32 PM
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Arrow With Honor and the Politics of Tribalism

With Honor and the Politics of Tribalism
RE: https://www.aspenideas.org/blog/hono...tics-tribalism

The current state of politics—polarized and marked by tribalism—is perhaps the greatest challenge our country faces. I had the privilege of serving in the Marine Corps and saw some of the turmoil and violence that tribalism and division causes around the world in Bosnia, Iraq, and the Horn of Africa. I would have never imagined that similar forces would be present here on our home front as they exist today. Though they are often not as violent, they are destructive and have caused acute paralysis and dysfunction in civic institutions across the U.S.

This is may be most acutely manifest in our Congress, which has led the famous business strategist Michael Porter to conclude that our political polarization and paralysis is perhaps the single biggest threat to our long term economic competitiveness as a country.

Americans live this frustration daily. Congress no longer tackles our country’s biggest issues, and, as a result, no national institution is suffering a crisis of trust more than Congress.

At the same time, veteran representation in Congress is at an all-time low. When Congress was functioning, veteran representation used to be as high as 70 percent. Today, it is near a historic low at 19 percent. We don’t think that it’s a coincidence.

With Honor, a movement that I co-founded along with other veterans, is disruptive and presents one of the few solutions to our crippling political polarization. Through our Super PAC, we support the most capable next-generation veterans seeking positions in Congress by independently supporting their campaigns and leveling the financial playing field. With over 400 veterans running for Congress, we support the most capable 30 to 40 veterans who sign our pledge to put principles before politics and serve with integrity, civility, and courage.

Veterans pledged an oath to support and defend the Constitution. They have served something greater than themselves. They know what it means to put the country’s interest ahead of their own. When I served with Marines overseas, we focused on the mission and got things done in tough places.

Since With Honor launched last year, veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have been victorious at the polls in primaries across the country. Bound by our pledge to put principles before politics, With Honor’s endorsed candidates commit to taking specific actions such as meeting with someone from another party once a month and sponsoring legislation with another party once a year.

We believe that a coalition based on this pledge can be effective in combating the forces of tribalism and polarization. If this coalition gets a critical mass and has real resources behind it to function with cohesion and help defend members when they have the courage to cross party lines, it can be a fulcrum in the House. This is possible, and it’s possible this cycle.

Our success in some of the most recent primaries provides testimony to how well our message is resonating with the American public. We have had tremendous momentum raising money for the organization and putting it to work. Two of our most notable success stories are Amy McGrath of Kentucky, a Democrat who was one of the first woman to fly fighter jets, and Dan Crenshaw of Texas, a Republican and Navy SEAL who lost his eye on his third combat tour. Dan went on to serve two more tours. Both of these principled veterans recognize that the country’s current path is not sustainable. We have to do something about it and these folks are stepping up by answering the call to serve again.

To quote one of our advisors, former Secretary of Defense Robert Gates, who has served eight presidents from both parties, in a recent Christian Science Monitor cover story: “Things aren’t working and there needs to be a change in attitude, philosophy, and outlook in people serving in Congress. Polarization has led to paralysis."

A new generation of principled leaders is ready to start turning our country around. I look forward to discussing how they can do it in more depth at the Aspen Ideas Festival in a presentation on June 27th with New York Times columnist David Brooks, who recently commented on this topic on News Hour at this link.

The views and opinions of the author are his own and do not necessarily reflect those of the Aspen Institute.

About the Related speaker(s):
Rye Barcott is co-founder and CEO of With Honor, a movement to elect a cross-partisan coalition of post-9/11 veterans who can help break down divisions and fix America’s broken politics. Barcott will speak as part of the Imperfect Union track at the Aspen Ideas Festival. Below he discusses a potential solution to the polarization of Washington politics.

David Brooks, New York Times columnist and Aspen Institute executive director, talks about efforts to bridge the differences that are dividing Americans. The forces of division have been tearing America's social fabric for decades. Our country is now dealing with isolation, alienation, and tribalism. But a new coalition of community builders with a new set of beliefs is rising to turn things around. New York Times columnist David Brooks is leading an effort at The Aspen Institute to bridge the differences that divide Americans. In this talk, he goes over what he’s discovering and how you can help.

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Personal note: Are we entering a period of time - "Marked by Tribalism"
RE: https://www.huffingtonpost.com/rosab...b_3661436.html

Human nature allows us to think our way out of blind spots. Tribalism is muted by other human creations, such as diverse communities with complex structures and more universalistic values. We call that civilization.
07/26/2013 08:18 pm ET Updated Sep 25, 2013

Race and gender discrimination, paralyzing political partisanship, and dysfunctional organizations plagued by infighting are popping up in so many settings that it is tempting to conclude that tribalism is inevitable.

Racial profiling seems obvious in the Trayvon Martin murder case, so much so that President Obama was moved to tell the nation that he could have been Trayvon 35 years ago. My colleague Charles Ogletree of Harvard Law School devoted his book Presumed Guilty to examples of judges, CEOs, scientists, and other top professionals pulled over by police for the crime of DWB — driving while black.

The U.S. Congress has developed hardened positions by party lines and cannot agree on an immigration bill. Some Congressional Republicans have come close to admitting that defeating the other side is more important than action on important national issues.
Sexual harassment in the military has become so prevalent, and un-addressed by the men in power, that authority for dealing with it is being taken out of military hands.
In the business world, Microsoft recently announced a reorganization to counter divisional rivalries and get its act together as a more unified enterprise, implicitly blaming tribalism for recent stumbles.

In sports, losing teams fracture into sub-groups by position. The record-holder for the longest losing streak in collegiate football history was plagued by hostility between the offensive line and the defensive line, as I found in research for my book Confidence: How Winning Streaks and Losing Streaks Begin and End.

At numerous summer camps, children divided randomly into groups for tournaments will quickly bond with their teammates and show hostility to the other teams. This was the finding of a classic experiment in social psychology. Groups of strangers are quick to find reasons that they are superior to the others.

In other, more serious, contests, rebels in parts of the Middle East, such as Syria, have trouble cooperating across squabbling factions, which weakens their ability to mount unified opposition.

Tribalism reflects strong ethnic or cultural identities that separate members of one group from another, making them loyal to people like them and suspicious of outsiders, which undermines efforts to forge common cause across groups. Visible differences make profiling even easier. Was it Trayvon Martin’s black skin or his hoodie that triggered George Zimmerman’s deadly pursuit?

Some social scientists say that in-group/out-group biases are hard-wired into the human brain. Even without overt prejudice, it is cognitively convenient for people to sort items into categories and respond based on what is usually associated with those categories, a form of statistical discrimination, playing the odds. Harvard social psychologist Mahzarin Banajee is a pioneer in the quick judgment school of research, arguing in Blindspot: Hidden Biases of Good People that stereotypes are pervasive and hard to overcome. It is one easy step from categories to pecking orders.

But it is important to not stop at analysis of unthinking instincts, lest we miss the other side of the story. Human nature also allows us to think our way out of blindspots. Tribalism is muted by other human creations, such as diverse communities with complex structures and more universalistic values. We call that civilization.

The triumph of civilization is to transcend cognitive biases. In The Better Angels of Our Nature, Harvard psychologist Steven Pinker argues that violence has been steadily decreasing through the centuries due to social changes that increase interconnectivity and understanding of other people. These include trade, population mobility, and communications media. He points to self-control, empathy, morality, and reason as the traits that counter primitive instincts. Perhaps reason has driven John McCain to attempt peace talks between Republicans and Democrats in the Senate.

When diversity is embraced and collaboration sought, productivity and creativity can be enhanced, as Harvard education professor Todd Pittinsky has argued in Us Plus Them. One key to getting the benefits is to normalize those who are different by stressing similarities, making them not-so-different after all. My research on how groups of mostly one social type treat people who are different, captured in my video fable A Tale of O: On Being Different, confirmed that it takes structural change — vastly increasing numbers and points of contact — to overcome casual biases. There are recent examples of such transcendence. Support for gay marriage has increased rapidly, and differences are now shrugged off in many countries as not that important, when everyone wants the same thing — a committed relationship and possibly children.

Interdependence is an even a better tribalism-buster. Although mere contact doesn’t erase fear and mistrust, a shared task that all parties care about replaces tribal instincts with other motivations. That works on the small group level and also for large-scale enterprises. For economic as well as social reasons, the companies I deal with want to avoid tribalism and become a unified force — One Enterprise. Especially in areas of rapidly evolving technologies, closed groups are vulnerable to developments they don’t see and can’t participate in. Tribalism gets in the way of innovation. For Verizon, for example, One Verizon means striving for a culture in which landline departments, which could easily feel threatened by the success of wireless, and wireless departments, which could easily feel superior to old-fashioned landlines, instead communicate, exchange people, and pursue projects together.

Some companies manage to come close to the One Enterprise ideal by finding a common purpose that is inspiring and motivating, helping people transcend their differences. When backed up by incentives for achieving common goals, a sense of community helps override selfish interests. Codes of conduct help too, specifying community norms that should not be violated regardless of local traditions. As an IBM manager in India told me in a conversation about the company’s global ethics code, “You cant have a wink-wink culture.”

Culture often derives from structure. Societal and organizational structures account for the degree to which tribalism surfaces. Organizational structures that allow divisions and departments to own their turf and people with long tenure to take root creates the same hardened group distinctions as Congressional redistricting to produce homogeneous voting blocs — all of which makes it easier to resist compromise, let alone collaboration. Contrast that with blurred boundaries that encourage coalition building in order to combine resources for mutually-beneficial initiatives, and a flow of people across them, so that everyone in the organization has multiple affiliations and has worked on numerous cross-sectional teams. This is also associated with higher levels of creativity and the flexibility to adapt to change. Prominent companies seeking innovation and growth, like the ones I write about in my book SuperCorp, also stress common values. They promote understanding of diverse people, and they support causes like gay marriage because they seek inclusiveness rather than divisiveness. This stems from leadership, but also from structures that encourage identification across the widest possible range, rather than focused on a small closed group. Future leaders are taught to think about how their products or pronouncements will be experienced by diverse constituencies and multiple ethnicities. It is hard to remain tribal when trying to be national, regional, and global.

Pluralism is the antidote to hard-and-fast differences that divide and harm. Tribes are a source of identity, but when people belong to many overlapping groups, they are more likely to think broadly, as cosmopolitans. When they work together in mix-and-match structures and depend on the performance of people from other groups for their own success, they are more likely to empathize with differences rather than mistrust them. Among the many arguments for universal military service or civilian national service is the leveling effect — same uniform, same cause — making differences less important than getting the job done. Now that women can engage in military combat, perhaps the vestiges of sexual harassment will fade there too.

Tribalism is not inevitable. We can civilize tendencies toward discrimination. But leaders must make it a priority.

About the writer: Rosabeth Moss Kanter is a Harvard Business School Professor, founding Chair and Director of the Harvard University Advanced Leadership Initiative, and author of numerous bestsellers.

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Question(s):

a. Why is the US so divided?
b. Are we truly racial profiling our citizens?
c. What can we do to change these divisions?
d. How will these current issues - effect our standing Military?
e. How will the world look upon the US in the near future?
f. Are we loosing trust in our Political System and/or it's Leadership - or both?
g. If so, how do we reboot the system to put us back on track?

Answer's (?): If we could answer these questions we may be able fix many of the issues that are currently driving American's crazy?

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O Almighty Lord God, who neither slumberest nor sleepest; Protect and assist, we beseech thee, all those who at home or abroad, by land, by sea, or in the air, are serving this country, that they, being armed with thy defence, may be preserved evermore in all perils; and being filled with wisdom and girded with strength, may do their duty to thy honour and glory; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

"IN GOD WE TRUST"
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  #3  
Old 10-29-2018, 08:49 AM
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reconeil reconeil is offline
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HC,
I was truly impressed and quite taken by your: "Now I don’t care who they are, or even what they claim to represent, unless a politician (any politician) honors their elected mandate, along with their sacred word or honor, they (regardless of their party affiliations) are not worth spit!",...since lately SO MANY of such ilk are sadly repeating twists and perversions (LYING ABOUT ALSO) of realities for Recapturing Power & Control over We The American Taxpayers, quite echoing daily on nationwide TV.

So then, and in that: "Such ilk" context,...I guess it's fair (realistic also) to say that Obama, Biden, Somers, Pelosi, Schumer, and too many other Democrat Political Supremacists: "ARE NOT WORTH SPIT".

Thus, sensible Americans should Vote wisely and accordingly for: "The Party of Lincoln"/GOP/Republicans, and/or for those whom are best for AMERICA & AMERICANS.

Neil
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